bg Plovdiv

Hadji Gyoka Pavlov House

- Raiko Daskalov Street 3 -
The residential and commercial building, which was built somewhere at the end of the 19th or the beginning of the 20th century, and was one of the many buildings in Plovdiv that were owned by the Bulgarian merchant, pilgrim, participant in the Bulgarian national liberation movement, Hadji Gyoka Pavlov. He was born on December 24, 1836, in the city of and became an orphan at a young age. Later on, he emigrated to Russia where he participated in the where he got wounded by a saber. After returning to Bulgaria, he moved to and became engaged in horsetrading. He found out that horses for caravans are in great demand in and went to Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Croatia, where he buys cheap horses and sells them at a higher price.
Hadji Gyoka Pavlov
He became an acquaintance and friend of , who often stayed in the house of Gyoka in Sopot. He took an active part in the preparation of the , and during the , he was one of the main organizers of the defense of Sopot, and then the escape of Sopot residents through the Balkans. He gained his wealth by trading wine and brandy, which he bought in , by traveling there even during the battles of the Russo-Turkish War that took place in the area. After the he moved to Plovdiv, where he used his accumulated wealth for the construction of schools, to support churches and the poor, orphans, the theater, all sorts of societies and organizations, and even for the prisoners. In 1905, he donated the Bulgaria Hotel, his most valuable property, as an income building for the Plovdiv orphans. Hadji Gyoka Pavlov died on August 31, 1905, in Plovdiv, at the age of 68.
One of the orphanages that Hadji Gyoka Pavlov supported
Underneath the roof of the Neo-Renaissance building, you'll be able to see two strips of , one of which contains larger dentils, which are adorned with leaves. All of the , which are located on the third floor, are crowned with a Corinthian . Two balconies are placed on the same floor, which are both supported by two and secured with a curved wrought iron railing that's lavishly embellished with . Between the third and second floor, you can see some more dentils, as well as between the second and first floor, but here you'll also able to see a Greek key motif. The protruding stone blocks, which are parts of the pilasters that stretch all the way up from the first until the second floor, give the building a nice multidimensional touch.
An old postcard showing the building on the right